AC 2007-918: DESIGN EDUCATION INNOVATION IN KOREA THROUGHCAPSTONE DESIGN EDUCATION PROGRAMDong Young Jang, Seoul National University of Technology Professor and Director of Capstone Design Education Center of SNUT, Ph.D. from University of Florida, Professor of University of Missouri-Columbia 1990-1997Heewon Lee, Seoul National University of Technology Professor of School of Mechanical Design and Automation Engineering, Director of Center for Engineering Education of SNUTSitae Won, Seoul National University of Technology Professor of Die and Mold Design Engineering Department Page 12.451.1© American
AC 2007-947: METEORITICS AND MATERIALS IN AN ME LAB COURSEBrandon Hathaway, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Brandon Hathaway is a senior Mechanical Engineering student at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. After graduation in May 2007, Brandon continue his studies in graduate school.Ashley Bernal, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Ashley Bernal is a graduate of the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering. Ms. Bernal is a Project Engineer with Boeing Aerospace in St. Louis.Cory Edds, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Cory Edds is a senior Mechanical Engineering student at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. Cory will be employed as a Project Engineer
AC 2007-1582: FROM CAPSTONE COURSES TO CORNERSTONE PROJECTS:TRANSFERRING EXPERIENCES FROM DESIGN ENGINEERING FINAL YEARSTUDENTS TO FIRST YEAR STUDENTSMartin Grimheden, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) Page 12.768.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 From Capstone Courses to Cornerstone Projects: Transferring Experiences from Design Engineering Final Year Students to First Year StudentsAbstractAt KTH, the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden, large capstone courses havebeen the base of higher engineering programs in product development during the last 20 years.The capstone courses has since the
AC 2007-273: CAN LEAN MANUFACTURING BE APPLIED TO UNIVERSITYLABORATORIES?Shirish Sreedharan , University of MissouriFrank Liou, University of Missouri Frank Liou is a Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Missouri-Rolla (UMR). He currently serves as the Director of the Manufacturing Engineering Program at UMR. His teaching and research interests include CAD/CAM, rapid prototyping, and rapid manufacturing. He has published over 100 technical papers and has research grants and contracts over $8M. Page 12.340.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Can
fields of Mechanical, Industrial, and Manufacturing Engineering.Ozden Uslu, Robert Morris University Graduate Student in Engineering Management program Page 12.1218.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Rapid Manufacturing – The Future of Production Systems ABSTRACTRapid Prototyping is a technology that converts three-dimensional computer models intophysical parts typically by building layers upon layer of material. This technology has beenserving designers for almost 20 years in support of demonstrating, testing, and confirmingtheir designs early and
AC 2007-99: MICRO-MANUFACTURING IN THE CLASSROOM ANDLABORATORYDavid Wells, North Dakota State University David L. Wells has been Professor of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at North Dakota State University since January 2000. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in process engineering and production engineering systems design for conventional manufacturing, electronics assembly and micro-manufacturing. His active research lies in micro-assembly, micro-machining, PCB process engineering, printed electronics, applications of RFID technologies, quantitative manufacturing management and manufacturing engineering pedagogy. He is active in SME, ASEE, SMTA, IEEE and ABET. Prior
innovation and commercialization, and rapid product developmentDavid Street, Rochester Institute of Technology David M. Street received BS degree in Mechanical Engineering Technology (MET) from Rochester Institute of Technology. He is graduate student at RIT in the Manufacturing and Mechanical Systems Integration department. His research interest includes rapid prototyping, product innovation & commercialization, and rapid product development.William Leonard, Rochester Institute of Technology is the program chair has been on faculty in the MET Department at Rochester Institute of Technology since 1998. Bill has a BSME from the College of Engineering at RIT and an M.S. at RIT. He has
AC 2007-2822: LAMPSHADE GAME FOR TEACHING LEAN MANUFACTURINGErtunga Ozelkan, University of North Carolina-Charlotte Ertunga C. Ozelkan, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of Engineering Management and the Associate Director of the Center for Lean Logistics and Engineered Systems at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Before joining academia, Dr. Ozelkan worked for i2 Technologies, a leading supply chain software vendor in the capacity of a Customer Service and Global Curriculum Manager and a Consultant. He also worked as a project manager and a consultant for Tefen Consulting in the area of productivity improvement for Hitech firms. Dr. Ozelkan holds a Ph.D. degree in Systems and
part is approximately $ 100,000 with the educational discount andhas a build volume of 250mm x 200mm x 200mm. The equipment for large production molds isapproximately $ 1.5 million and is used in several automotive and defense research laboratories.Conclusions Rapid manufacturing has advanced the metal casting process to new levels and has Page 12.1217.6greatly reduced the tooling and labor requirements. Rapid manufacturing is revitalizing themetal casting industry in the developed nations by making it more competitive on a cost basisand more appealing to engineers of the future. The new technology will reduce many of theproblems of the
AC 2007-971: A THOROUGH HANDS-ON PROCESS TO IMPLEMENT A RFIDSYSTEMBen Zoghi, Texas A&M University Dr. Ben Zoghi is currently a Professor and Director of RFID/Sensor Lab in the Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution Department at Texas A&M University. He has served the department as Industrial Distribution Program Coordinator, Executive Director of Thomas and Joan Read Center and Associate Department Head for Research since he joined Texas A&M in 1987. His research activities include RFID/Sensors and engineering leadership development. Dr. Zoghi is a senior member fo IEEE, meber of ASEE, TAP, TBP. He has over 100 educational and research publications.Ryan Beasely, TAMU
, video journals have in many ways distracted attention fromthe primary goal of the class. Our focus in this paper is a large engineering course, yet neithersize nor subject inhibit our approach from finding application elsewhere. Similarly, the researchwe present for working with video archives is generally applicable in other classroomenvironments. We show how we have designed and evaluated a multimedia browser (VAST MM= Video Audio Structure Text MultiMedia Browser) to address seamless audio-visual recordingand dissemination in a typical engineering classroom. Page 12.985.2IntroductionWith the advent of inexpensive technology, classroom
Environmental Health andSafety had the second highest response rate at 23%. The respondents that listed other could enterin their program and the two responses stated “Engineering with a minor in Occupational Safety”and “Risk Control”. Page 12.1435.10Table 1Type of Safety and Health Degree Response f CountOccupational Safety 47.0% 14Environmental Health 10.0% 3Occupational and 7.0% 7Environmental Health andSafetyFire Protection 3.0% 1Safety Studies (Safety 3.0% 1Sciences)Industrial Technology 7.0
AC 2007-2366: CAPSTONE DESIGN PROJECTS WITH INDUSTRY: USINGRUBRICS TO ASSESS STUDENT DESIGN REPORTSPatricia Brackin, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology M. PATRICIA BRACKIN is an Associate Professor of M.E. at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology where she teaches a variety of design courses, and graphics. Her BS and MS are from the University of Tennessee in Nuclear Engineering and her Ph.D. is from Georgia Institute of Technology in ME. She has also been an Associate Professor at Christian Brothers University. Her industrial experience includes Oak Ridge National Laboratories and Chicago Bridge and Iron. She is a registered PE.J. Darrell Gibson, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
serve.Background:Interest in collegiate-level engineering or technology entrepreneurship has been increasing at arapid rate over the past 10 years. Examples of this interest are easily found: • The Entrepreneurship (ENT) Division within ASEE in 2000 and ENT Division membership now has over 550 members, indicating a strong interest from individual faculty members and their institutions. • A supportive national organization for these entrepreneurial efforts (the National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance - NCIIA1) was formed in 1995 under financial support of the Lemelson Foundation2, with the number of NCIIA member institutions now standing at 339. The NCIIA provides encouragement of technology entrepreneurship
-delivered “window” on digital resources for Indiana middle school teachers of science,mathematics, (pre)-engineering, and technology (STEM). The project is hosted at Rose-HulmanInstitute of Technology. Opened in September 2003, with funding from the Lilly Endowment[27], PRISM (Portal Resources for Indiana Science and Mathematics) was recently selected byT.H.E. (Journal of Technology Horizons in Education) as one of the top 15 educationalinnovators for K-12 in the nation.Clearly we are not alone in using the concept of an Internet portal to provide resources forteachers. Simultaneous with PRISM’s development over the last three years, other collections(many of them highly eclectic and predominately text-based) have appeared, and several havegarnered
AC 2007-1138: A NAFP PROJECT: USE OF OBJECT ORIENTEDMETHODOLOGIES AND DESIGN PATTERNS TO REFACTOR SOFTWAREDESIGNGholam Ali Shaykhian, NASA Gholam “Ali” Shaykhian Gholam Ali Shaykhian is a software engineer with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Engineering Directorate. He is a National Administrator Fellowship Program (NAFP) fellow and served his fellowships at Bethune Cookman College in Daytona Beach, Florida. Ali is currently pursing a Ph.D. in Operations Research at Florida Institute of Technology. He has received a Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Computer Systems from University of Central Florida in 1985 and a second M.S. degree in
statistical programming.John Carpinelli, New Jersey Institute of Technology JOHN D. CARPINELLI is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Director of the Center for Pre-College Programs at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He previously served as coordinator of activities at NJIT for the Gateway Engineering Education Coalition and as a member of the Coalition's Governing Board. He currently chair's NJIT's Excellence in Teaching Awards Committee and is past chair of the University Master Teacher Committee.Howard Kimmel, New Jersey Institute of Technology HOWARD KIMMEL is Professor of Chemical Engineering and Executive Director of the Center for Pre-College Programs
its firstthree years, the paper discusses survey highlights, anecdotal findings and programrevisions/enhancements that produced successful results.BackgroundIn Hawaii, as across the nation, critical shortages in the science, technology, engineering, andmath (STEM) workforce have generated substantial interest from government and industryleaders to increase the recruitment and retention of women, and other underrepresented groups inSTEM education and employment1.“At a time when we face a shortage of skilled STEM workers who are U.S. citizens, womenprovide an untapped national resource to fill the workforce pipeline,” acknowledged U.S.Senator Inouye (D-HI)2 in his 2004 floor statement to the Senate.According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s
AC 2007-475: USING ASME PERFORMANCE TEST CODES IN THEUNDERGRADUATE MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CURRICULUMPhilip Gerhart, University of Evansville Philip Gerhart is the Dean of the College of Engineering and Computer Science and a professor of mechanical and civil engineering at the University of Evansville in Indiana. He is a member of the ASEE Engineering Deans Council. He is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and serves on their Performance Test Codes Standards Committee. He chairs the PTC committee on Steam Generators and is vice-chair of the committee on Fans.Andrew Gerhart, Lawrence Technological University Andrew Gerhart is an assistant professor of mechanical
AC 2007-1205: TRAVELING ENGINEERING ACTIVITY KITS – ENERGY ANDTHE ENVIRONMENT: DESIGNED BY COLLEGE STUDENTS FOR MIDDLESCHOOL STUDENTSElizabeth DeBartolo, Rochester Institute of Technology ELIZABETH A. DEBARTOLO is an Associate Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the Rochester Institute of Technology. She earned her BSE at Duke University in 1994 and her MSME and Ph.D. at Purdue University in 1996 and 2000, respectively. She works with several students in the area of fatigue life prediction. Dr. DeBartolo serves on her college's leadership teams for both multi-disciplinary capstone design and outreach program development.Margaret Bailey, Rochester Institute of Technology
joining The MathWorks, Liz worked at a Massachusetts Institute of Technology spin-off software company and managed HR for Saga Holidays, Ltd. of the UK. She serves on advisory boards of Sustainable Business Network, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and National Public Radio. Liz holds a B.A. from Wellesley College.Zachariah Chambers, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Zachariah Chambers, Associate Professor, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Terre Haute, IN, 47803, Ph. (812) 877-8904, FAX: (812) 877-8895 chambez@rose-hulman.edu. Zachariah Chambers is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology where he earned his mechanical engineering BS
AC 2007-866: FINDING A "PLACE" FOR READING AND DISCUSSIONCOURSES: DESIGN AND ASSESSMENT OF "SOCIAL AND ETHICAL IMPACTSOF TECHNOLOGY"Kyle Oliver, University of Wisconsin-Madison Kyle Oliver is a graduate student in the Department of Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.Traci Kelly, University of Wisconsin-Madison Dr. Traci Kelly is an Assistant Faculty Associate in the Department of Engineering Professional Development at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.Sandra Courter, University of Wisconsin-Madison Dr. Sandra Courter is the Director of the Engineering Learning Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.Laura Grossenbacher, University of Wisconsin-Madison Dr
CEO of World Links, a spin off of the World Bank. Page 12.822.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007IFEES: A New Alliance to Shape Global Engineering Education for the 21stCentury WorldWe are all now part of a worldwide market economy involving billions of people.However, due to advances in inexpensive, powerful and omnipresent informationtechnology, we communicate with the rest of the world in ways undreamed of ageneration ago.Since most of the technology we use is developed by engineers, the field of engineeringis being drastically altered by these changes. Recognizing that the 21st century globaleconomy requires well
Milwaukee School of Engineering. He received his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering in 1995 and his MS degree in Electrical Engineering in 1974 both from Marquette University. Gassert is an AIMBE Fellow, a Senior Member of the IEEE, and an ABET EAC program evaluator for Biomedical Engineering. He has developed and taught courses at both the graduate and undergraduate level in Biomedical Engineering, Medical Informatics, Perfusion, Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, and Electrical Engineering Technology. Prior to arriving at MSOE, Gassert spent seventeen years in industry in positions as a design engineer, a clinical engineer and a consultant.Lawrence J. Schmedeman
AC 2007-1102: ESTABLISHING FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS AND TARGETSPECIFICATIONS: A KEY COMPONENT OF PRODUCT DEVELOPMENTPROJECTSKarim Muci-Küchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Karim Muci-Küchler is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Before joining SDSM&T, he was an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Detroit Mercy. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from Iowa State University in 1992. His main interest areas include Computational Mechanics, Solid Mechanics, and Product Design and Development. He has taught several different courses at the undergraduate and graduate level, has over 25
in Materials Science and Engineering (1997), and a Ph.D. degree in Materials Science and Engineering (2000) from the University of Michigan. In 2004, he was named Templeton Research Fellow by the Center for Academic Integrity, an appointment that involved close collaboration with other researchers in the field of academic integrity. Dr. Harding received both the 1999 Apprentice Faculty Grant and 2000 New Faculty Fellow Award for his contributions to engineering education. He was also an invited participant in the NSF-sponsored Engineering Education Research Colloquy Series.Donald Carpenter, Lawrence Technological University Dr. Donald D. Carpenter is Associate Professor of Civil
AC 2007-783: FINDINGS FROM WORKSHOPS ON FAILURE CASE STUDIES INTHE CIVIL ENGINEERING AND ENGINEERING MECHANICS CURRICULUMNorb Delatte, Cleveland State UniversityPaul Bosela, Cleveland State UniversityKevin Rens, University of Colorado-DenverKenneth Carper, Washington State UniversityKevin Sutterer, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Page 12.745.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Findings from Workshops on Failure Case Studies in the Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics CurriculumAbstract The study of engineering failures can offer students valuable insights into associatedtechnical, ethical, and professional issues
AC 2007-1888: THE NATIONAL PROJECT FOR THE INNOVATIVEDEVELOPMENT OF THE HIGHER ENGINEERING EDUCATION IN RUSSIAVasili Zhurakovskiy, Russian Association of Engineering Universities Prof., Dr. of Sc., Former Rector of the Rostov-on-Don Institute of the Agricultural Machinebuilding, Former 1st Deputy Minister of the Russian Federation Ministry of Education, President of the Russian Association of Engineering UniversitiesAleksey Nesterov, Russian Association of Engineering Universities Prof., Dr. of Sc., Head of Welding Department in the Moscow State University of Aviation Technology (MATI), General Director of the Russian Association of Engineering Universities
AC 2007-2652: CIM LAB TO SUPPORT MANUFACTURING DESIGNIMPLEMENTATIONJahangir Ansari, Virginia State University JAHANGIR ANSARI is an Assistant Professor of Manufacturing Engineering in the Department of Engineering and Technology at Virginia State University. He received his M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1979 and Ph. D. degree in Mechanical Design and Production Engineering in 1983 both from Seoul National University. He joined the faculty at VSU in 2002. He has over 18 years of industrial experience in different areas including shipbuilding and cement plant industries. His research interests include Structural Vibration, FEM, CAD/CAM/CNC, and Computer Integrated
AC 2007-787: PAUL REVERE IN THE SCIENCE LAB: INTEGRATINGHUMANITIES AND ENGINEERING PEDAGOGIES TO DEVELOP SKILLS INCONTEXTUAL UNDERSTANDING AND SELF-DIRECTED LEARNINGRobert Martello, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering Robert Martello is an Associate Professor of the History of Science and Technology at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering.Jonathan Stolk, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering Jonathan Stolk is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. Page 12.1147.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007